COURT UPHOLDS DEPORTATION OF CATSKILLS MAN
WHO SERVED AS NAZI CAMP GUARD

WASHINGTON, D.C. - Christopher A. Wray, Assistant Attorney General in
charge of the Criminal Division, announced today that an immigration appeals
court has paved the way for the deportation of an Ellenville, N.Y. man who
served as a guard at two SS-slave labor camps in Nazi-occupied Poland.

In October 2002, an immigration judge ordered that Mykola Wasylyk, 79, be
deported from the United States because he had served from April 1943 to
November 1943 as an armed guard of Jews and other civilian prisoners at the
Trawniki and Budzyn forced labor camps in Nazi-occupied Poland. On Tuesday,
March 23, the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) affirmed that Wasylyk is
subject to deportation because of his wartime service.

“The BIA’s decision reaffirms the Department’s commitment to ensure that
justice is served regardless of how long it takes,” said Assistant Attorney
General Christopher A. Wray. “This former Nazi concentration camp guard will
no longer be able to enjoy the privileges of his American citizenship.”

The 2002 decision by the immigration judge ordered Wasylyk’s deportation to
Ukraine because he is an ethnic Ukrainian who was born in a Polish village
that is now part of Ukraine. At Wasylyk’s request, the BIA amended the
deportation order to require that the government first attempt to deport him
to Switzerland. Wasylyk has previously acknowledged that he has no ties to
Switzerland, and the BIA’s ruling is not expected to delay his removal. Under
the BIA’s decision, if Switzerland does not notify the Justice Department
within 30 days that it will accept Wasylyk, he can then be deported to
Ukraine.

“As Wasylyk knew full well at the time, his actions as an armed, uniformed
guard at Nazi slave labor camps served to oppress the prisoners and deterred
attempts to resist, escape, or seek help,” said Eli M. Rosenbaum, Director of
the Office of Special Investigations, which brought the case on behalf of the
Justice Department. “His claims of innocence have rightly been rejected by the
courts.”

Wasylyk immigrated to the United States in 1949 and became a U.S. citizen in
1955. His U.S. citizenship was revoked by a federal district court in December
2001 because of his wartime service as a Nazi camp guard. In that decision,
U.S. District Judge Norman A. Mordue rejected Wasylyk’s claim that he was
unaware of any persecution against the prisoners he guarded and concluded that
Wasylyk had “assisted the enemy in persecuting civilian populations.”

The deportation order against Wasylyk is a result of OSI's ongoing efforts to
identify, investigate and take legal action against former participants in
Nazi persecution who reside in the United States. Since OSI began operations
in 1979, it has won cases against 93 individuals who assisted in Nazi
persecution. In addition, 170 individuals who sought to enter the United
States in recent years have been blocked from doing so as a result of OSI's
“Watch List” program, which is enforced in cooperation with the Department of
Homeland Security.